Unsure on the sharks but a lot of the roombas have an open source project (ha980?) that lets you run all the Apis locally and cut it off from the internet fully. Mines managed through home assistant now, it's not perfect but it beats the heck out of that shitty iRobot app
I have one of those cheap TCL Roku TVs, I think it was something like $130 for a 55 inch a few years ago on sale.
I put it on a VLAN then added a rule just for it to only ever allow communication to my Jellyfin server. No internet, no other devices, Wireless AP isolation, just able to access that port on that address.
It works ok but it does nag me that it's not connected when opening Jellyfin, cheaper than adding a dedicated TV box to it though! I tried a similar setup with an old Fire TV and it really doesn't like being "offline" like that and makes you navigate through the settings to open any of the apps.
If I were buying new I'd try to go for a monitor for sure, it's just not worth all the potential issues.
Yep and reddit is slowly closing themselves off, I wouldn't doubt you eventually have to be logged in to even view anything.
Forums are still around but it's usually just the older established ones (I'm on stangnet.com and corral.net regularly but they're car related so lots of technical info). Everything new either went Reddit or Discord it feels like and I'll never install Discord.
I think Jellyfin started a forum post reddit but I haven't gone looking yet for that one.
Information is absolutely getting harder to find online and if archive.org goes down we're really screwed
I don't think your particular case would have any creep as it's not mechanically leveraged in any real way.
If you were to print something like a cupholder for a stroller or bike where it's holding something up with some weight while in the heat is where you would notice it especially with repeated impact. Most likely wouldn't outright fail but under constant load you would notice it starting to bend a little. That said you can absolutely over engineer it to prevent that rather than switching materials which can be a huge pain depending on the printer.
I did my hydroponic tower in PETG but it honestly would've been ok in PLA since it's just a static fixture. I've had a PLA badge on my car for 3 years in 110+ summers and similar to you I've only noticed fading on the raised white lettering.
JetBrains did similar with their perpetual fallback license and it did ok. My only gripe with their strategy was it required either the upfront year paid or at the end of 12 months of month to month you would get the license. Issue was the license was from the first month so you would have to go downgrade. I like your idea way more
Typically using Lando which is a frontend for docker-compose which makes it easier for the users unfamiliar with docker to use it to spin up their environments.
I've got 3 Wyze cam v3s running the wyze mini hacks firmware sectioned off in a VLAN that can only reach Frigate (no internet).
I have frigate running on a cheap Lenovo M900 I got on ebay for $65 that has an i7 and 8gb of memory and it actually does fairly well without the Google coral USB TPU as long as that was the only service on that system. Trying to run Frigate on my NUC with other services without a TPU caused some issues with CPU usage but with a TPU I would bet it'll all run on the one system.
Home assistant works exceptionally well for notifying, one of my cameras I have on UDP since the signal isn't great and get a couple artifacts that trip it up but other than that it has been much quicker to notify and more reliable than anything in the consumer market I've tried so far.
I'm on the 5A now and my wife has a 7, her 7 has the screen randomly freak out where you can't even turn it on or reset (holding power will make it vibrate after about a second preventing the hold to reset). Just have to mess with it until you can get in and hit restart then it's fine for another week or two usually.
The 5A is fantastic until it abruptly dies which has happened to me twice now (both times while sitting with it in my hand). If they didn't have screen and motherboard issues I would absolutely run this phone into the ground since it's a great experience with GrapheneOS, has a headphones jack, and has the rear facing fingerprint sensor.
I can't speak to the 6 but I know some people didn't like them after the 5 since it switched to tensor
Using sonixd for desktop and finamp for mobile through my Jellyfin server and really liking it.
I did have to make a separate Jellyfin account for my music since I didn't want music showing up on the Jellyfin TV apps cluttering it up but not bad overall!
Finamp doesn't track new items in a playlist marked for offline play which is my main gripe atm.
I used gpt4 for terraform and it was kind of all over the place in terms of fully deprecated methods. It felt like a nice jumping off point but honestly probably would've been less work to just write it up from the docs in the first place.
I can definitely see how it could help someone fumble through it and come up with something working without knowing what to look for though.
Was also having weird issues with it truncating outputs and needing to split it, but even telling it to split would cause it to kind of stall.
I just used a buck converter and a USB pigtail for mine so it still plugs into the pi where the power cable used to it's just running off the Ender 3s power supply. They were fairly cheap on Amazon something like $6 for a pack
The only cables you really see for my printer are the short USB connecting the Pi to the SKR on the back, and the power supply cable. The rest is hidden or inside cable chains.
Definitely made moving the printer easier and much less of an eyesore of wiring.
When was the last time you ran a distro and how awful was the hardware to have this experience? In the past 10 years all of them have been fairly "hit the ground running" for me unless it had something weird like Nvidia Optimus
I remember watching the trailer for that game over and over and over, the first one you could go outside